Raiders tickets available to students, faculty, staff

A limited number of tickets to the Oakland Raiders- New England Patriots
NFL exhibition game scheduled for Friday, Aug. 25, at Stanford Stadium will
be made available to Stanford faculty, staff and students starting Monday,
Aug. 21.

Tickets for students are free, and each student who presents a valid
Stanford identification is entitled to two tickets. Faculty, staff and
community members can purchase tickets at a discount rate, $10 apiece, by
showing a valid Stanford identification. Proceeds will be donated to charity,
said Valerie Veronin of the Athletics Department.

The tickets will be available at one site only - the ticket office at
Stanford Stadium, from Monday, Aug. 21, through Wednesday, Aug. 23. The
office is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily.

Tickets for sale to the general public, already discounted once, now range
in price from $21 to $36, depending on location.

A crowd of between 40,000 and 70,000 is expected for the game, which
starts at 6 p.m. and will be televised locally on KRON-TV, Channel 4. The
game also will be televised in Los Angeles and in New England.

On the day of the game, traffic congestion is expected and parking in the
area near the stadium will be restricted. The Maples Pavilion and Track House
lots will be used for pay parking. Flyers will be placed on cars that use
those lots daily advising owners to park instead in the Serra Complex lot on
game day.

Lots 4, 6 and part of Lot 10 will open for football parking at noon; each
car will be charged $10 to park at Stanford for the game. The rest of the
lots will open at 3 p.m. Gates to Stanford Stadium will open at 4 p.m.

Extra security personnel will be on hand to enforce the no- alcohol rule,
and to watch for fans carrying flagpoles and other banned items.

At about 4 p.m., Galvez Street between Campus Drive and El Camino Real
will be closed to non-game traffic, as will Arboretum between Palm and Galvez
and Lasuen between Campus Drive and Arboretum.

Stanford employees who normally leave campus on those roads should take
alternate routes home that evening. Serra Street or Palm Drive will remain
open to normal traffic but delays are expected, according to Sgt. Del Bandy
of the Stanford Police Department.

Police from Palo Alto, Stanford, Menlo Park and East Palo Alto, along with
the California Highway Patrol, suggest that fans take public transit to the
game.

CalTrain has announced that all of its trains will stop at the Stanford
Stadium station, which trains normally bypass, between 3:30 and 10:30 p.m. on
game day. The station is located on Embarcadero Road across El Camino Real
from the Stadium. For schedule and fare information, call (800) 660-4287.

Dumbarton Express plans to add buses to bring East Bay fans to the game.
For information about that service, call (800) 559-INFO.

Drivers from peninsula points are being asked to take the Embarcadero Road
exit from U.S. 101, and either the Page Mill Road or Sand Hill Road exits off
Interstate 280. Stanford employees who take either of those roads out of
campus to get to 280 should instead use Alpine Road, Bandy said.

Better yet, he said, employees might want to consider taking a few hours
off, with supervisors' approval, in order to leave campus before fans start
arriving en masse.

"What we'd really suggest, especially for those people who work in the
northeast part of campus, and who travel east after work, is to try and
arrange some time off on that day," Bandy said. "With all those fans coming
in during the rush hour, we expect traffic to be pretty bad."

Ticket sales for the Raiders game at Stanford have been sluggish. Unlike
most professional football teams, the Raiders this year did not require their
roughly 50,000 season ticket-holders to purchase tickets to their two home
exhibition games.

The Raiders, who returned to Oakland this season after 13 years in Los
Angeles, will play at Stanford because their home stadium, the Oakland
Coliseum, was booked for an Oakland A's baseball game on Aug. 25. The NFL
schedule was based on the premise that the Raiders still would be playing
home games in Los Angeles.

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